DeSimone Consulting Engineers

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DeSimone Consulting Engineers
Industrystructural engineering firm
Founded1969
FounderVincent J. DeSimone
HeadquartersNew York City
Area served
New York City
Miami
San Francisco
New Haven
Las Vegas
Houston
Abu Dhabi
Boston
Chicago
Medellin
Websitewww.de-simone.com

DeSimone Consulting Engineers is a structural engineering firm founded by Vincent J. DeSimone in 1969 in New York City.[1] The firm provides structural engineering services to architects, owners and developers, and performs structural analysis and design for all types of buildings at all project phases. DeSimone also launched a Property Loss Consulting division in 2016. The company has offices in New York City, Miami, San Francisco, New Haven, Las Vegas, Houston, Abu Dhabi, Boston, Chicago, and Medellin. As of 2016, DeSimone has designed over 10,000 projects in 40 states and 45 countries.[2][3][4]

Engineering[]

Exoskeleton buildings[]

DeSimone is recognized for its work with exoskeleton buildings, including the award-winning residential building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan at 170 Amsterdam Avenue.[5] The 20-story residential high-rise features a concrete exoskeleton with a diagrid design and was developed using newly available modeling technology. The building's exoskeleton moves the structure to the exterior, allowing for flexible floor plans free of columns. A specialized concrete mix was used for the exterior structure which was made to look like limestone. Fiberglass was also used also used on the exterior.[5] DeSimone was nominated and received a Diamond Award for Structural Systems from the American Council of Engineering Companies in 2016 for their work on 170 Amsterdam.[6]

DeSimone is also the structural engineering firm for One Thousand Museum in Miami, Florida.[citation needed] Designed by Zaha Hadid, the building is the first skyscraper by the Pritzker-winning architect in the United States.[7] DeSimone developed a curved "root" exoskeleton structure to support the building. The record setting auger cast pile deep foundation system was installed by HJ Foundation, part of the keller Group. Like with The Grove at Grand Bay project, placing the buildings support systems on the exterior allows for increased space inside and reduces the amount of materials used.[8] The exoskeleton structure was originally purely cosmetic, but DeSimone was able to integrate the design into the structural engineering, creating the exterior support structure out of hollow, precast, concrete panels.[9]

Twisting buildings[]

DeSimone engineered the first truly twisting towers in the US with The Grove at Grand Bay towers in Miami, Florida designed by the Danish starchitect Bjarke Ingels.[10] Grove at Grand Bay features two 20-story buildings with 98 apartments that feature 12-foot high ceilings and 14-foot deep balconies. The twisting element of the buildings has a total rotation of 38 degrees, and provides panoramic views of the Biscayne Bay and the Miami skyline.[11][unreliable source?]

Like One Thousand Museum, the auger cast pile deep foundation system for this building was by HJ Foundation, part of the Keller Group. The twisting nature of the columns posed a number of structural challenges. The main challenge was to resist torsion generated in the tower core due to the sloping column geometry. The horizontal component of the gravity load in the columns is resolved in the slabs by transferring it to the interior core shear walls, which are the only consistently vertical structural elements in the building.[11] DeSimone was nominated and received a Platinum Award for Structural Systems from the American Council of Engineering Companies in 2016 for their work on The Grove at Grand Bay[6]

Skyscrapers and supertalls[]

DeSimone has served as structural engineer for many skyscrapers and is currently working on a supertall building, 125 Greenwich Street designed by Rafael Viñoly which tops out at over 1,000 feet.[12] DeSimone is also the engineering firm behind 99 Hudson Street, an 889-foot residential tower under construction in Jersey City, New Jersey.[13] Upon completion, it will be the tallest building in the state of New Jersey and the 4th tallest residential tower in the United States.[14]

Work with "Starchitects"[]

DeSimone has worked on projects with many of the world's most renowned architects and architectural firms including Zaha Hadid,[15] Bjarke Ingels,[16] Richard Meier,[17] Robert A.M. Stern,[18] Foster and Partners, Rafael Viñoly, Rem Koolhas,[19] Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA),[19] Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM), Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF),[18] Arquitectonica,[20] and SLCE.[21]

Sustainability[]

DeSimone is a U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) National Member organization.[22] DeSimone's work on P.S. 62, The Kathleen Grimm School for Leadership and Sustainability, New York City's first net-zero energy school, has received numerous awards including the 2016 AIANY COTE Award, Best Green Project by the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce, Architizer A+ Awards – Primary and High Schools 2016, and Engineering News Record (New York Region) – Best Green Project 2016.[23][24][25][26]

Notable projects[]

References[]

  1. ^ https://archpaper.com/2016/11/engineer-vincent-j-desimone-passes-away/
  2. ^ "Company overview of DeSimone Consulting Engineering, Inc".
  3. ^ "DeSimone Consulting Engineers - Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat".
  4. ^ "About Us". DeSimone Consulting Engineers.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b "DeSimone collects an engineering award for work on 170 Amsterdam".
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b "American Council of Engineering Companies of New York - 2016 Engineering Excellence Awards".
  7. ^ Cotter, Molly (19 December 2012). "Zaha Hadid To Build Her First American Skyscraper In Miami! - Architizer". Architizer.
  8. ^ "1000 Museum truly isn't even a museum | ZAHA HADID - Arch2O.com".
  9. ^ Campbell-Dollaghan, Kelsey (27 May 2015). "How Engineers Are Building Skyscrapers That Seem Physically Impossible". Gizmodo.
  10. ^ "Structural Engineering, Keeping High-Rises Safe" (PDF).
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b "United States' First Truly Twisting Towers". DeSimone Consulting Engineers. 2014-02-10.[unreliable source?]
  12. ^ "Living among the clouds: New York's supertall buildings".
  13. ^ https://skyscrapercenter.com/building/99-hudson-street/1867
  14. ^ http://www.highrises.com/tallest-residential-buildings.php
  15. ^ "Zaha Hadid Broke Barriers to Create Dramatic, Daring Architecture". Investor's Business Daily. 22 July 2016.
  16. ^ "Every apartment in this honeycomb-style building has a private pool on its balcony".
  17. ^ https://www.vsl.net/case-study/surf-club
  18. ^ Jump up to: a b "Interview: Engineer Joseph Gulden Discusses Wooden Skyscrapers Surpassing 1,000 Feet".
  19. ^ Jump up to: a b "OMA completes trio of buildings for Miami Beach cultural district". 2 December 2016.
  20. ^ Taranath, Bungale S. (2011-10-18). Structural Analysis and Design of Tall Buildings: Steel and Composite Construction. ISBN 9781439850893.
  21. ^ Taranath, Bungale S. (2011-10-18). Structural Analysis and Design of Tall Buildings: Steel and Composite Construction. ISBN 9781439850893.
  22. ^ "LEED Directory".
  23. ^ "Best Project Winners Announced for ENR New York".
  24. ^ http://www.sichamber.com/post/3410474-judging-takes-place-for-the-staten
  25. ^ http://awards.architizer.com/
  26. ^ http://aianycoteawards.org/winners/

External links[]

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